At 2020 NEA RA, Educators Vow to Help Lead Nation Through Crisis
Of all the events and activities that ground to a halt amid the greatest public health crisis in the nation’s history, the 2020 National Education Association Representative Assembly (RA) wasn’t going to be among them. On July 2 and 3, the more than 7,000 delegates gathered remotely (of course) and the agenda was streamlined. But the show – the first all-virtual RA in NEA’s history – went on.
“We have masks, social distancing, and disinfectant,” NEA President Lily Eskelsen GarcÃa said, referring to the podium at NEA headquarters she would be sharing only with NEA officers. “Because nothing, absolutely nothing, not even a global pandemic, is going to stop the National Education Association from doing its work.”
The RA theme this year was “Our Democracy; Our Responsibility; Our Time.” In 2020, the stakes are just too high for educator voices to go silent. The pandemic has bought the country to its knees, triggering an unprecedented economic crisis that is impacting millions of educators and students. The country may finally be confronting the legacy of institutionalized racism. And the destructive DeVos-Trump school privatization agenda continues to undermine our public education system.
As NEA Vice-President Becky Pringle put it in her opening remarks: “Delegates, it’s crunch time.”
This year, delegates also had to bid farewell to outgoing NEA President Lily Eskelsen GarcÃa, whose second three-year term ends on August 31. Video tributes to Eskelsen GarcÃa (and NEA) poured in from everyone from Michelle Obama, Hillary Clinton, Rep. James Clyburn, AFT President Randi Weingarten, and Trevor Noah, host of “The Daily Show.”
Eskelsen GarcÃa is a leader who is “undaunted by naysayers,” Pringle said in her introduction of the NEA president. “Unfazed by those who believe something is impossible. You are undeterred by CONTINUE READING: At 2020 NEA RA, Educators Vow to Help Lead Nation Through Crisis